Triplanar sempiternal gymnoplexus with mutual longitudinal orthogonal planes and intrinsic structural integrity

ABSTRACT

This sempiternal gymnoplexus with its&#39; innate structural integrity is the nexus of a new skating paradigm which will provide both longitudinal and sinistrodextral support to the talocrural joint during both ice and roller skating maneuvers. This paradigm can accommodate various special rail sliding blocks for extreme skating, braking devices for roller skating, and contoured knife edge blades for ice skating, when the rollers, disks, or cylinders are removed from the plexus. Which will result in an unattainable, before now, a uniquely diversified skating repertoire. This paradigm also supports either hardware or belt mounting of the skaters pedal equipment. The structure also supports the necessary appurtenances that are required for this paradigm shift to be successful for disk, roller, cylinder and ice skaters of various maven levels, on multiterrains.

[0001] A triplanar sempiternal gymnoplexus with mutual longitudinalorthogonal planes and intrinsic structural integrity. When thisgymnoplexus is configured properly, it is suitable for performing onmultisurfaces, the complex or routine aerial or nonaerial roller and iceambulatory maneuvers of the skating repertoire. The gymnoplexus hasmounting capabilities for disks, cylinders, pedal equipment, brakingdevice, with integral rotational locking geometry for the shafts of theroller skating disks or cylinders.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

[0002] None.

STATEMENT REGARDING FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH OR DEVELOPMENT

[0003] The federal involvement with this nonprovisional utility patentapplication is; null.

REFERENCE TO A MICROFICHE APPENDIX: Not Applicable. BACKGROUND OF THEINVENTION

[0004] In prior art, the required circumambulate equipment plexus forextreme, roller rink, obstacle terrain, trail and ice skating isconspicuously disparate.

BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

[0005] The sempiternal gymnoplexus provides the equipment paradigm thatserves the needs of an eclectic skating population. This paradigmprovides support for the talocrural joint across the plantigrade of thefoot. This sinistrodextral and longitudinal support of the footfacilitates dynamic ambulatory stability, which will encourages complexadventurous aerial and nonaerial skating maneuvers across the spectrumof skating communities. For those skaters that are oblivious to, oruninterested in, the expanded skating maneuvering possibilities, thebenefits of the enhanced dynamic ambulatory stability are stillavailable.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWING

[0006]FIG. 1 is an elevation view of the near side (J), of thegymnoplexus with the near (A), and far (B), side shaft mountinggeometries for the disk or roller shafts' and the extreme skating railsliding block (D), highlighted, the ice skating brakes (C), are alsohighlighted. The mounting locations for the roller skating brake spars(G), are also shown. The mounting locations (F), for foot wear belts, ifused, are also shown.

[0007]FIG. 2 is an end view of the gymnoplexus.

[0008]FIG. 3 is a top view (K), of the afore mentioned gymnoplexus, withthe foot wear mounting locations for hardware (E), highlighted.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

[0009] The triplanar sempiternal gymnoplexus which is fabricated fromsheet stainless steel. That has been contour cut or stamped to providesaw toothed brakes and blades for ice skating when they are folded intoplace. the contoured ice skating blades, while flat have a knife edgeaffixed as the results of a grinding operation prior to their beingfolded into their final orthogonal position. Although the grinding ofthe knife edge is ideally accomplished when the plexus is flat. Thisoperation may also be accomplished with the blades in their finalorthogonal position. The contouring also provides mounting geometriesfor the shafts of rink, terrain or extreme rollers, mounting for railsliding blocks for extreme skating, brake spars for rink, trail orobstacle terrain rollers and pedal securing hardware of locking nuts,screws, washers or belts. This contoured entity is then folded into theshape of a channel, in pedal appropriate lengths and widths. Thistriplane single entity unit becomes the plexus for an avantgardepansurface skating mantra. Which will provide the means for complexmobile maneuvering, which shall include ambulatory manipulation of thedevice, when strategically attached, to various primary pedal carriages,e.g. boots, sandals, shoes . . . etc, via a row of disk or cylindroiddevices. The center plane of the gymnoplexus has two orthogonal planesattached at its' sinistrodextral extremities. The two folded attachedlongitudinal parallel planes are dual purposed. They serve as themounting nexus for the rink, trail, obstacle terrain or extreme rollerskating appurtenances which are required for this multisurface skatingparadigm.

[0010] With all the braking devices, sliding blocks, disks or cylindroiddevices removed and stabilization beams added between the two parallelplanes at the front and rear roller shaft locations, this plexus gestaltis thus, transformed for ice skating. Thus this sempiternal plexusprovides provisions for the skating requirements of an eclectic spectrumof skaters.

[0011] The cylinders or disks may be mounted to the gymnoplexus in thecontemporary genres of, inline or tetraroller organization. Or in a newparadigm, that of one roller centrally inboard of the plexus at thefront, and two rollers outboard at the rear of the plexus. The reverseof this roller organization is also viable. Any of these rollerarrangements are practicable for rink, terrain or extreme skating. Theshafts for the disks or cylinders are mounted between the parallelplanes of the plexus. One end of these aforementioned shafts is anchoredinto a rotation locking “D” shaped hole. So as to allow all cylinder ordisk rotation to be accomplished by the disks' or cylinders' ballbearings which are captive to it. The parallel planes also providemounting for braking devices, which are positioned at both extremes ofthe longitudinal dimension. Although the braking devices are notstrictly necessary, for the primary function of the device to beachieved. As the maven level of the wearer maybe such as not to requirethe braking devices, and as such the braking devices may appear ateither end, both ends, or with none of the devices for impedimenta.

What I claim as my invention is:
 1. A triplanar sempiternal gymnoplexus(J) and (K) with a series of cutouts (F), to accommodate belts or strapsfor locking pedal equipment into a stable position upon the center plane(K).
 2. A triplanar sempiternal gymnoplexus (J) and (K) with multipleprovision (E), for locking pedal equipment into a monostable position,with hardware, i.e. screws, washers and locking nuts upon the centerplane (K).
 3. A triplanar sempiternal gymnoplexus (J) and (K) withprovisions (A, B and G), for mounting braking devices.
 4. A triplanarsempiternal gymnoplexus (J) and (K) with provisions (D), for mountingrail sliding blocks used in extreme skating.
 5. A triplanar sempiternalgymnoplexus (J) and (K) with saw tooth braking geometry (C), for iceskating.
 6. A triplanar sempiternal gymnoplexus (J) and (K) withrotation locking provisions (A), for the shafts of the disks, cylinders,or rollers without regard for the rotational devices' arrangementparadigm or stabilization beams for ice skating after all rotationalskating paraphernalia has been removed.
 7. A triplanar sempiternalgymnoplexus (J) and (K) with dual parallel contoured knife edge blades(H), for ice skating.
 8. A triplanar sempiternal gymnoplexus (J) and (K)that has the innate dual capacity to fulfill the requirements of amultiterrain, multiroller arrangements roller skating plexus or whenstripped of the rotational skating paraphernalia the gymnoplexus istransformed to meet the requirements for multivenue ice skating.